Labor Demand Measure

From GM-RKB
(Redirected from demand for labor)
Jump to navigation Jump to search

A Labor Demand Measure is an factor demand measure (ratio measure) for labor hours.



References

2014

  • (Wikipedia, 2014) ⇒ http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/labor_demand Retrieved:2014-11-30.
    • In economics, labor demand refers to the number of hours of hiring that an employer is willing to do based on the various exogenous (externally determined) variables it is faced with, such as the wage rate, the unit cost of capital, the market-determined selling price of its output, etc. The function specifying the quantity of labor that would be demanded at any of various possible values of these exogenous variables is called the labor demand function. [1]
  1. Varian, Hal, 1992, Microeconomic Analysis, 3rd Ed., W.W. Norton & Company, Inc. New York.


2014


  • http://www.sparknotes.com/economics/micro/labormarkets/labordemand/section1.rhtml
    • QUOTE: The firms who sold goods and services in the unit on supply and demand now become the buyers in the labor market. Firms need workers to make products, design those products, package them, sell them, advertise for them, ship them, and distribute them, among other tasks. No worker will do this for free, and so firms must enter into the labor market and buy labor. Firms determine the amount of labor that they demand according to several considerations: how much the labor will cost (as represented by the market wage), and how much they feel they need, much in the way that buyers in the goods and services market buy according to the market price and their own needs.

2013